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Beagles & Ramsay: Gasworks Gallery.


Art critics and cultural theorists looking for Looking for

In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with.
 a potentially infinitely expandable metaphor might do worse than plump for "ventriloquism ventriloquism: see puppet.
ventriloquism

Art of “throwing” one's voice in such a way that the sound seems to come from a source other than the speaker.
." A quick trawl trawl - To sift through large volumes of data (e.g. Usenet postings, FTP archives, or the Jargon File) looking for something of interest.  through motif is almost universally adaptable, signaling (among other things, and in no particular order): the death of the author, the artwork in process, problems of free will and determination, the workings of ideology, Cartesian dualism dualism, any philosophical system that seeks to explain all phenomena in terms of two distinct and irreducible principles. It is opposed to monism and pluralism. In Plato's philosophy there is an ultimate dualism of being and becoming, of ideas and matter. , the failings of Western idealism, cyborg identity, and practically every psychoanalytic model of individual or collective subject formation one might care to dredge up. But as tar as art practice goes, just a hardy few have risked invoking ventriloquism directly, among them, Laurie Simmons, Asta Groting (recently shown at London's Freud Museum), and now Glasgow duo John Beagles and Graham Ramsay, in their installation Dead of Night, 2003.

The show's star exhibit was a pair of ventriloquists' dummies, handcrafted hand·craft  
n.
Variant of handicraft.

tr.v. hand·craft·ed, hand·craft·ing, hand·crafts
To fashion or make by hand.



hand·craft
 by the artists to represent their chubbier-cheeked younger selves. These were showcased in a crimson mock-up mock·up also mock-up  
n.
1. A usually full-sized scale model of a structure, used for demonstration, study, or testing.

2. A layout of printed matter.
 of a theater; the two dummies presided over a spotlighted stage, and their voices squeaked and croaked show-time banalities--"Thank you all and God bless"--from a hidden speaker. Backstage, a dressing room with theatrical mirror, toiletries toi·let·ry  
n. pl. toi·let·ries
An article, such as toothpaste or a hairbrush, used in personal grooming or dressing.

toiletries nplartículos mpl de aseo (=
, and a litter of human- and dummy-sized clothing also featured a faux--closed circuit screening of a video of the two po-faced artists and their dummies performing on stage. A third space featured a video shot in the evocatively decrepit Britannia Panopticon Pa`nop´ti`con

n. 1. A prison so contructed that the inspector can see each of the prisoners at all times, without being seen.
2. A room for the exhibition of novelties.

Noun 1.
 Music Hall in Glasgow; this was a montage of campy horror-movie cliches--pans up and down spiral staircases; manic interactions between the artists and the dummies; the dummies, seemingly possessed of independent life, chattering together in deserted auditoriums. Also on show were a number of studio portrait-style photographs, in ostentatiously os·ten·ta·tious  
adj.
Characterized by or given to ostentation; pretentious. See Synonyms at showy.



os
 tasteless gilt frames, of the four protagonists.

Unenthusiastic UK art-critical responses to Dead of Night complained that the installation wasn't spooky and that the artists had failed to invest their theme with any psychological profundity. Both observations are true but miss the point. Beagles & Ramsay's work frequently foregrounds images of evacuated subject-hood (for example, Ramsay's hilarious 1996 solo piece Robot Snorkel Parka Prototype, in which a remote-controlled robot "visits" the Macintosh Gallery of the Glasgow School of Art Glasgow School of Art is one of four independent art schools in Scotland, situated in the Garnethill area of Glasgow. History
It was founded in 1845 as the Glasgow Government School of Design, one of the first Government Schools of Design.
); it also evidences a persistent interest in devalued symbolic currency, critical motifs that have collapsed through over-use (see here their blending of "burger culture" and celebrity worship in the performance BURGERHEAVEN--THE TRUE TASTE OF STARDOM, 2001/2002, or We Are the People--Suck on This, 1999, in which Ramsay, clothed and coiffed a la Travis Bickle--hero of art-school undergrad thesis projects the world over--delivered a meaningless two signature petition to Tony Blair at 10 Downing Street).

In a recently published essay, Beagles and co-author Dave Beech broadsided the tendency of cultural studies to recast the consumption of popular culture as a radical activity. In their view, this is an academic distortion. Beagles & Ramsay's evacuated tropes might therefore be read as filibustering: Delivering neither a slick, brainy critique nor a dumbly celebratory endorsement, their hollow men survive simply by sticking around (a Baudrillardian tactic, though the artists would probably hate the suggestion). A clue left in the Dead of Night dressing room supports this reading--a copy of Hamlet, lying open at act 3, scene 2. Hamlet is giving those two self-declared mediocrities Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Rosencrantz and Guildenstern

Hamlet’s traitorous friends; “adders fang’d.” [Br. Lit.: Hamlet]

See : Treachery
 a hard time. The two Danish patsies' big mistake is to leave the stage and set off for England. Dead of Night's double acts refused to fall for that one, even after their audience had left. "It's so wonderful to be here! You've been a wonderful audience!" the dummies could be overheard cackling--to an empty gallery.
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Title Annotation:installation Dead of Night, 2003 by John Beagles and Graham Ramsay; London
Author:Withers, Rachel
Publication:Artforum International
Geographic Code:4EUUS
Date:Oct 1, 2003
Words:597
Previous Article:Tal R: Victoria Miro Gallery.(London)(mixed-media works in artist's London solo debut)
Next Article:Jeffrey Dennis: Art Space Gallery.(London)(exhibition of the artist's paintings)
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